AI Search Takes Off: How Startups Are Rewriting Industry Rules
AI search startups are becoming investment stars. Perplexity, Exa, and other players are quietly transforming search, challenging Google's monopoly. Investors s
AI-processed from TechCrunch; edited by Hamidun News
AI search has quietly become one of the most attractive niches in consumer AI. Over the past two years, startups like Perplexity, Exa, and others have raised billions in investments, rewriting what we thought about searching for information and interacting with data on the internet.
Why Search Attracts Investors So Much
Search is a fundamental internet tool. Every day, billions of people search for information, read news, and check facts. This means a giant market and deeply entrenched user habits.
AI search promises results that are more relevant, faster, and clearer than Google's. Unlike general AI assistants, search solves a specific, narrow task: find what you need quickly. It's easier to sell, easier to monetize through ads or subscriptions, easier to prove value to users.
Users don't need to learn how to use the tool—they're already familiar with search. Investors see search as a long-lived business that won't disappear in a few years when the AI hype dies down.
- Search results are more relevant than traditional search
- Answers are provided immediately, without scrolling through blue links
- The logic and grammar of answers are superior to LLM responses without context
- Ability to ask clarifying questions within a single conversation
- Monetization is simpler than general AI assistants
Who's Winning the Race
Perplexity and Exa have raised hundreds of millions of dollars and achieved valuations in the billions. Google isn't asleep and is launching AI-powered features in Search. OpenAI is embedding search into ChatGPT, trying to keep up. But young companies move faster: they're not tied to the old model of clicks and ad blocks, can change their product every week, and experiment with new interfaces.
"AI search is not hype, it's a rewriting of the fundamentals of how people find information.
This is clearly a big market," say investors from leading venture funds.
What This Means
The search industry is moving into the AI era faster than seemed likely a year ago. Google won't disappear—it has too many resources. But its monopoly is cracking. Young companies are managing to take market share because their products work better in practice. For users, this is good: competition breeds innovation. For investors, this is the major event of the year because search is truly a big market.
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